Skyscraper-filled Dubai burnishes arts scene with new opera

The city-state is opening the Dubai Opera on Wednesday night, in the shadow of the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building.

This isn’t the first opera house built on the Arabian Peninsula, as Oman opened the Royal Opera House Muscat in 2011. But the arrival of the performance center comes as part of a greater push by the United Arab Emirates, already home to engineering marvels, into the world of the fine arts.

“It certainly couldn’t be said that Dubai has no culture; it’s got an enormous amount of culture,” Dubai Opera’s chief executive Jasper Hope told The Associated Press on Tuesday. “What it hasn’t had is a world-class stage, a world-class facility to display that culture.

“What Dubai Opera offers is an opportunity now for people to know that there is a home — a true home — for world-class culture here in Dubai.”

The opera house resembles a dhow, the traditional wooden boat that can still be seen plying the waters of the Dubai Creek. Its glass bow rises up to a point looking out at the dancing Dubai Fountain, and a multi-story glass chandelier resembling a fishing net hangs in the lobby. The building sits near the 828-meter (2,717-foot) -tall Burj Khalifa and the nearby Dubai Mall in the city-state’s chic downtown.

Inside, individual air conditioning vents beneath the 2,000-some seats are designed to quietly cool the auditorium during the desert city’s boiling summers, when temperatures exceed 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit). The auditorium can be reconfigured for gala events and other performances.

Emaar Properties, which is partially owned by the Dubai government, developed the opera house. It refused to say how much the structure cost when asked by the AP.

Those on hand for a dress rehearsal Tuesday of the opera “The Barber of Seville” also stopped journalists and those gathered from taking pictures outside of the building, as migrant workers rushed to finish constructing a set of exterior stairs. The opera will open Wednesday night with a performance by famed Spanish tenor Plácido Domingo.

The Dubai Opera offers a new draw for planned Emaar high-rise residential towers downtown, and could bring concerts and events out of the cavernous, air-conditioned halls of the city’s World Trade Center.

The arrival of the opera house comes amid a push in the seven-sheikhdom United Arab Emirates to increase its presence on the global arts stage.

In the country’s capital, construction continues on the Louvre Abu Dhabi, the forthcoming Emirati branch of the famed Parisian art gallery. A branch of the New York-based Guggenheim Museum is also planned. And in Dubai, a fledging art district has sprung up among the factories and warehouses of its Al Quoz industrial area.

The new development has proven divisive at times. Many in the art world have criticized Abu Dhabi’s penchant for franchising existing names, and human rights groups have raised concerns about the conditions faced by migrant workers.

But Hope said the building of the opera house wouldn’t mark the end of Dubai’s efforts at drawing cultural events, but rather its beginning.

“This can inspire all kinds of performance — amateur and professional,” he said. “It can inspire the next generation to really understand what world-class live entertainment is all about. And that deserves something of this scale.”

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Online:

Dubai Opera: http://www.dubaiopera.com/

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Follow Jon Gambrell on Twitter at www.twitter.com/jongambrellap. His work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/jon-gambrell.